29 December 2017

Ahronovitch Conducts Nielsen

The Russian-Israeli conductor Yuri Ahronovitch (1932-2002) made only a few commercial records, although he was a most interesting musical personality.

Among those recordings was this 1981 live performance of Nielsen's Symphony No. 3 ("Sinfonia Espansiva") with the Danish Radio Symphony Orchestra, transferred here from a Unicorn-Kanchana LP.

Yuri Ahronovitch
This is a well-judged, well-played version of Nielsen's wonderful symphony. Ahronovitch was known for his subjective interpretations, but there is little evidence here of that tendency, except for his slamming on the brakes before the symphony's final chord. Unicorn-Kanchana seemingly decided to set up its microphones in the last row of the hall, but the distant sonics are well balanced.

Both the audience and the orchestra were impressed. Unicorn includes four minutes of applause at the conclusion of the performance (which I have put into a separate track), and the orchestra serenades Ahronovitch with a "tusch", a type of musical salute heard occasionally at European concerts. This is the only commercial recording in my collection with such a fanfare, and I have to say it startled me the first time I heard it many years ago.

Ahronovitch, a pupil of Natan Rakhlin, became conductor of the USSR Ministry of Culture Orchestra when he was only 32, holding that post until emigrating to Israel in 1972. Later he was chief conductor of the Cologne Gürzenich Orchestra and the Stockholm Philharmonic.

This is a later recording than I usually post, but I transferred it for another site, and decided to make it available to followers of this blog as well. I will also be transferring Ahronovitch's recording of Taneyev's Fourth Symphony, with the London Symphony.

LINK

NB - Several years ago I posted the first recording of Nielsen's third symphony, also made with the Danish Radio Symphony, and conducted by Erik Tuxen. I've newly remastered that recording, and it is now available via this post.

21 December 2017

Holiday Music from 1960s Cleveland

After my post of Christmas music from Oberlin College, a few readers thanked me for presenting local artists. So here is an excellent holiday LP from one of the great churches in nearby Cleveland.

It originates from the Church of the Covenant, a Presbyterian congregation in University Circle, just a block away from Severance Hall. The Covenant, as it is called, has a long-standing and robust music program, well displayed in this album, which I believe dates from the mid to late 1960s.

Side 1 of Music at the Covenant, presents Christmas music, with side 2 focusing primarily on Easter.

Henry Fusner
Leading the Covenant Choir is church music director and organist Henry Fusner, who was in residence there from 1956-70, before moving on to a long career in Nashville. Joy Lawrence directs the delightful Youth Choirs and Bell Ringers. The soloists are Cinderella Paradiso, soprano, Ruth Porter, contralto, William Martin, tenor, and Marshall Bell, baritone.

As you might expect, the choir handles Romantic and 20th century works more smoothly than Palestrina and Gibbons. But the standard of execution is impressive, and this program is sure to please. The sound is high quality mono, engineered by Vlad Maleckar, who was responsible for Cleveland Orchestra broadcasts for many years.

The recording was presumably made in the church, an imposing Ralph Adams Cram design dating from 1911.

Church of the Covenant

19 December 2017

More Ames Brothers for Christmas

Last time out, I presented a collection of the Ames Brothers' 1949-52 Christmas records, while noting that it was missing two items: the "Twelve Days of Christmas" and the "Wassail Song."

My great friend Ernie, who has more Christmas records than Santa, has now come to our rescue by providing those absent items. They are contained on his transfer of the brothers' first holiday album for Coral, Sing a Song of Christmas.

Just to be clear: the other six songs on this album are also included on The Sounds of Christmas Harmony, presented below. Still, this allows us to complete the Ames Brothers holiday collection on Coral records.

If you enjoy Christmas music as much as I do, you should make it a point to head on over to Ernie's blog, where he is in the midst of posting rare holiday music each day this month. Not to be missed!

16 December 2017

Christmas Harmony from the Ames Brothers

The Ames Brothers achieved their first successes on Decca's new subsidiary, Coral Records, beginning in 1949, and it wasn't long before the label had them recording the latest holiday songs, along with traditional carols.

This 12-inch LP collects most of those efforts, beginning on side 1 with the 1949 coupling of "White Christmas" and "Winter Wonderland." The brothers are in great form here, as throughout, spirits undimmed by Roy Ross's clunky arrangements.

From 1951 comes "Jolly Old St. Nicholas" and "Jing-a-Ling-a Tingle" (a lively polka), with Marty Manning showing a Western swing influence in his charts.

The 1952 holiday season brought "Sing a Song of Santa Claus" and "Winter's Here Again," backed by Ray Bloch. That year, Coral collected this coupling with Christmas singles by Eileen Barton, Johnny Desmond and Don Cornell into a special 10-inch LP, The NEW Christmas Songs, which I shared back in the early days of the blog. I've now remastered that recording and brought it back here.

1952 ad
The second side of the Ames Brothers LP collects carols the siblings set down in 1950 for their first Christmas album, a 10-incher that also included "The Twelve Days of Christmas" and "Wassail Song," which are missing here. The group handles the sacred items just as well as the secular tunes on side 1.

"The Sounds of Christmas Harmony" collection dates from 1957. By that time the Ames boys had moved on to RCA Victor, and the issuance of thus Coral LP was likely inspired by the new Christmas LP that they had taped for RCA.

Christmas disharmony

13 December 2017

Christmas in Oberlin, 1957

I looked close to home for my next holiday share - nearby Oberlin College, located west of Cleveland.

This Christmas program by the Oberlin College Choir, directed by Robert Fountain, dates from the holiday season 60 years ago. The conductor programmed pieces from the 16th century composer Tomás Luis de Victoria through to his contemporaries Randall Thompson, Normand Lockwood and Herbert Howells.

Fountain was one of the best regarded college choral directors of his time, spending equally long periods at Oberlin (where he was also director of the noted Conservatory of Music for a time) and later the University of Wisconsin.

An Oberlin Choir tour to the Soviet Union, 1964: Fountain is flanked by students Walter Denny and Joy Blackett; his wife Clara is at right.
This is a cleanly recorded, nicely sung and well balanced program that honors both the choir and its director.

My copy of the record came in a dark green cover; apparently it also appeared in the white cover shown in the picture above, which I have lifted from the web. I've transformed the back cover into a black-and-white facsimile as well, so the words can be read more easily.

There is no information on the cover about the recording location, but it was probably in Oberlin's Finney Chapel, a beautiful Cass Gilbert building dating from 1908.


Finney Chapel

08 December 2017

Seasonal Fare from Mid-Century England

This post is an opportunity to present some of my favorite singers from England's postwar music scene. Dame Vera Lynn has appeared here before, but Lita Roza, Dame Gracie Fields and the wonderful Anne Shelton have not.

The theme, given the time of year, is Christmas music or at least vaguely seasonal fare, with a good mix of familiar and unfamiliar songs. All are from Decca London 78s in my collection.

Vera Lynn
Let's start with three selections from the most famous and beloved vocalist of the group - Dame Vera Lynn, still with us at age 100. Her items are all relatively unfamiliar, and attractive in their own ways - "Christmas Time" and "Jolly Jolly Jingle" from 1950, and the gorgeous "Once Upon a Wintertime" from 1948. "Jolly Jolly Jingle," with small group accompaniment, is notable for being more relaxed and uptempo than most of Dame Vera's repertoire. The other backings are by the ubiquitous Bob Farnon.

Gracie Fields
Our next artist, Gracie Fields, is equally renowned, but perhaps more as a music hall and film personality than as a great pop vocalist. That said, she does well with a warm rendition of "White Christmas," but can't make much out of the awkward and treacly "Christmas Love." The accompaniments on this 1948 issue are again by Bob Farnon.

Anne Shelton
One of the great voices of the time was undoubtedly that of contralto Anne Shelton, allied to her considerable expressive skill as a singer. Her selections start with the familiar "Greensleeves" (from circa 1948), then move on to the affecting "This Is the Time of the Year" (circa 1948-9) and a beautiful version of "While the Angelus Was Ringing" (from 1949). The latter song was a hit for Edith Piaf a few years before as "Les Trois Cloches" and made a comeback as "The Three Bells" for the Browns in 1959. Shelton's orchestra leaders are Jay Wilbur, Bernie Landes and Roy Robertson, respectively.

Lita Roza
We complete our miniature survey with a single from a slightly newer artist, Lita Roza, who is perhaps the least known of the quartet here in the US, although well regarded among pop vocal enthusiasts. Her first hit was in 1953 (the same year as this single) with a cover of Patti Page's notorious "How Much Is that Doggy In the Window?" Perhaps under the spell of the Singing Rage, Roza at times tries to sing with her tongue stuck to her palate, but the vocals still emerge well enough, surprisingly enough. Here she assays "The Little Boy That Santa Claus Forgot," a song that careens into the mawkish given half a chance. Roza manages to just avoid the trap. The best versions are probably the warm and caring renditions by Vera Lynn and Nat Cole. We end up with the "St. Nicolas Waltz," which, appropriately, seems inspired by Patti Page's hit version of the "Tennessee Waltz." The only differences: a seasonal rather than geographic orientation, and it isn't nearly as good a song. Well worth listening to, though, and nicely done. Johnny Douglas with the backings.

Many of the singles I have presented here are from old store stock or deejay copies. Not these, though, so I hope you will forgive some background rustle and a few other sonic artifacts from Christmases long ago.

03 December 2017

Nöel-France with the Janequin Chorale

For our second Christmas post, we move from Flanders to France for this fine 10-inch LP dating from 1955.

Jean Périsson
Nöel-France presents a selection of fare that is mainly unfamiliar to this middle American, in enchanting performances by the Janequin Chorale, led by Jean Périsson.

The liner notes tell us that the Chorale is an outgrowth of an ensemble led by Marcel Couraud, a relatively well known conductor. His younger colleague Périsson had won the Besançon conducing competition a few years before, and was embarking on a long career (he is apparently still with us). This is one of Périsson's few recordings.

Périsson provided the arrangements for the first six carols on the LP. The intimate sound is very pleasing - an enjoyable disc!

22 November 2017

Kerstmis - Christmas in Flanders

There may be no better way to herald the holiday season with this gorgeous cover and the lovely and touching music it contains.

Lod. de Vocht
"Kerstmis" is Dutch for Christmas, and this 10-inch LP originated in Flanders, the Dutch-speaking part of Belgium, circa 1960.

Leading the vocal and instrumental ensembles, and I believe also arranging the music, is the Flemish composer, conductor and educator Lodewijk de Vocht (1887-1977). The choral groups are the Royal Chorale Caecilia, which de Vocht founded, and the Boys' Choir of St. Livinus's College, Antwerp.

De Vocht reached back as far as the 14th century for his materials, arranging them to present the story of the nativity.

Poster for 1940 de Vocht concert
I was enchanted by the music and charmed by the performances, and wanted to provide you with a translation of the explanatory notes, which are in Dutch. Unfortunately, the machine translation was too far afield from comprehensibility for me to even complete a rough clean up for you. At one point Google insisted that the shepherds' voices were accompanied by shawms and a noodle pack, which can't be right.

UPDATE: Flemish reader Monsieur Maurice has come to the rescue with a translation of the notes into English! Please see the comments section for a link. Thanks, Monsieur Maurice!

After some coaxing, the record yielded pleasing sound. But there are a few momentary hiccups that I hope you will forgive, this being the holiday season and all.

Happy Thanksgiving to US readers!

17 November 2017

Neal Hefti on Coral

Neal Hefti hasn't made many appearances on this blog, but his bands, arrangements and compositions are favorites of mine (well, maybe not the "Batman Theme").

Hefti made his name by composing and arranging for Woody Herman and other bands in the 40s. He directed a few sides for Mercury and Clef, but his first major contract was with Decca and its subsidiary Coral label, starting in 1951.

The young Neal Hefti
Hefti's initial output came out on singles, many of which were assembled on this 10-inch LP in 1953. It takes its title from "Coral Reef," the first instrumental the composer recorded for the label.

All songs therein are Hefti originals, mainly straight-ahead swingers that display the considerable skill and drive of his studio band. There aren't many solos, but you will hear contributions from Billy Taylor's piano and the leader's trumpet.

12-inch LP cover
Hefti moved on to RCA's new Label "X" at about the same time as this LP came out. (See my post of his Rudolf Friml album here.) But such defections don't deter record companies from capitalizing on their back catalogs, so in 1956 Coral repackaged Swingin' on Coral Reef as a 12-inch LP called The Band with Young Ideas by adding four songs from the same 1951-52 sessions. Two of these are Hefti compositions - "Waltzing on a Cloud" and "In Veradero." "Sahara's Aide" is one of the many classical Frankensongs that were popular about then, and "Charmaine" was a cover of Mantovani's British hit of the time. The latter has a vocal by the Cavaliers. I've transferred these added tunes from my copy of the 12-inch record, and have included them in the download.

Count Basie
During this time, Hefti was consolidating his reputation as a freelance band arranger and composer. He contributed "In Veradero" to the Stan Kenton band, and began his long association with the so-called "New Testament" Count Basie band. Among the first recordings for his reorganized band, Basie included Hefti's "Why Not?" and "Sure Thing," also assayed by the composer himself for this group of Coral sides. I've added the Basie recordings to the download so you can hear the considerable contrast between the two bands. The Basies are not my transfers, but I have remastered the sound.

Coral's sonics are well-balanced, but with a fair amount of reverb, which distances the band. You may notice the difference when you come to the Norman Granz-produced Basie sides. [Note (June 2023): These recordings have now been remastered in vivid ambient stereo.]

By the way, I believe the photo of Hefti on the 10- and 12-inch LPs is the same. Looks like they flopped the photo for the Coral Reef album, judging by the part in his hair.

10 November 2017

Song Settings by Finzi, Butterworth and Vaughan Williams

Gerald Finzi
Recently I have been posting recordings of the Walton-Sitwell entertainment Façade, including the original 1929 version with Dame Edith and Constant Lambert, Walton conducting. That edition came from a LP that also offered the first recordings of two notable sets of English song - Gerald Finzi's Dies Natalis and George Butterworth's A Shropshire Lad. Today I am posting my transfers of that music, together with the initial recording of Ralph Vaughan Williams's On Wenlock Edge - three landmarks in 20th century English song setting.

For Dies Natalis, Finzi set poems by Thomas Traherne, a 17th century poet and clergyman whose work is generally grouped with the metaphysical poets although his writings were virtually unknown until the 20th century. Dies Natalis is in form a cantata, with an orchestral introduction and then settings of four striking poems that convey the wonder and innocence of the newborn child.

Joan Cross
The performance is by soprano Joan Cross and the Boyd Neel Orchestra, dating from October 1946 and January 1947. The legend is that neither the composer nor the singer were happy with the results, and today the set is seldom heard. There is something to that: Cross was a noted actor, but wonder and innocence were apparently not in her artistic arsenal. Still and all, the records are not as bad as one might think. They convey Finzi's gorgeous string writing well, and the singer is sympathetic, clear and in tune.

The full power of Finzi's work would not be displayed on record until 1964, when it was taken up for EMI by tenor Wilfred Brown and the composer's son, Christopher. This remains my own favorite, one I played for myself the night my first child was born nearly 40 years ago.

Gervase Elwes
Both Vaughan Williams and his younger colleague George Butterworth set poems by their contemporary A.E. Housman, drawn from his popular collection A Shropshire Lad. The older composer set six of the poems for tenor, piano and string quartet. The work is here performed by tenor Gervase Elwes, the work's dedicatee, with pianist Frederick Kiddle and the London String Quartet. Elwes and Kiddle both took part in the first performance, in 1909. The recording dates from 1917, and is thoroughly remarkable. Elwes is more declamatory than is the norm a century later. His sense of time is flexible; he and the instrumentalists draw out the concluding "Clun" to powerful effect. It's impossible not to reflect that the sense of loss and impending doom - always implicit in Housman - were especially pronounced during the recording sessions, which took place three years into the horrific first world war.

George Butterworth
Butterworth himself was a victim of the war, killed in the Battle of the Somme in 1916 at age 31. He left relatively few works; notably this collection and the orchestral work The Banks of Green Willow. Both he and Vaughan Williams set Housman's ironic "Is My Team Ploughing?" As you might expect, given their similar styles and close association, the settings have some similarity. Vaughan Williams left out the poem's two stanzas that dealt with football, to Housman's irritation. The composer thought the poet ought to be happy he left out a passage with the clunky couplet "The goal stands up, the keeper / Stands up to keep the goal."

Butterworth set 11 poems from A Shropshire Lad; this is the first set, which strictly speaking is called Six Songs from A Shropshire Lad. The second set, not included here, is Bredon Hill and Other Songs.


Roy Henderson
The present recording comes from 1941, with Roy Henderson, one of the finest baritones of his generation, and Gerald Moore, the most famous accompanist of the time.

The sound on all these issues is well balanced and pleasing - even the Vaughan Williams from a century ago. Using modern tools, it's possible to get good results from many such acoustic recordings, within the limits of their constricted frequency range.

03 November 2017

Edith Sitwell's 1949 Façade

The other day I was listening to some early-30s radio recordings of George Gershwin performing his own music, and was struck by how different his rendition of the first piano Prelude was from the version done by his follower Oscar Levant in the 1940s. Levant makes the piece sound like an Americanized Satie, while Gershwin shows it to be from the ragtime tradition.

I'm probably not alone in preferring Levant's evocative playing to Gershwin's brisk run-through - even though there is something that tells me I should prefer the composer in his own work.

This, too, is the case with William Walton's settings of Edith Sitwell's poetry. Do I have to like Walton's own 1929 recording of Façade, with Sitwell and Constant Lambert as reciters, recently presented here? Or can I admit to a strong predilection for this 1949 outing by Sitwell and a chamber orchestra led by the young Frederik (here spelled Frederick) Prausnitz?

In truth, I also prefer Dame Edith's recitation on this 10-inch LP to her efforts 20 years before. While she does not have the breath control of her younger self, she seems more engaged with Prausnitz's flexible reading of the score.

1948 Horst P. Horst portrait of Edith Sitwell
Then again, this is not to say that Walton would approve. Reader JAC, who knows the piece intimately from having performed it several times, commented on the 1929 version: "Study of the score reveals that Dame Edith never mastered the specific rhythms that Walton wrote, particularly the syncopations; sometimes she wasn't even in the right measure."

Columbia's 1949 recording was designed to be a 25th anniversary edition of Façade's first public performance. The cover notes by Osbert Sitwell describe its genesis and the scandal that attended that premiere. Columbia's Goddard Lieberson indulges in some hyperbole about Sitwell, and the whole thing is presented as being produced "in cooperation with the Museum of Modern Art," although it's not clear what's MOMA contribution had been. The very good recording comes from Columbia's 30th Street Studio.

Columbia engaged the wonderful Jim Flora for its cover. His idiosyncratic drawings are well in tune with the spirit of the proceedings, with his letter forms a particular delight.

Frederik Prausnitz
A final note: this may have been conductor Prausnitz's first record session. He went on to be typed, at least in the recording studio, as a 20th-century specialist. His next record, also for Columbia, was of Carl Ruggles, in 1954. He went on to conduct scores by Wolpe, Sessions, Schoenberg, Riegger, Musgrave, Gerhard, Dallapiccola, Carter and Busoni for Columbia, EMI and Argo.

28 October 2017

Maria Cole

While Nat Cole was certainly the most famous member of his family, he wasn't the only singer in the brood. His brothers Ike and Freddy both sang professionally - Freddy still does, in fact. Nat married a singer, Maria Hawkins Ellington, and their daughter Natalie was very successful as well.

Nat and Maria Cole
Maria Cole had sung with Duke Ellington and Count Basie before her marriage, and made occasional records and personal appearances in the 1950s and 60s. Today's post is devoted to her second LP, made for the Dot label in 1960.

It's a pleasant outing in the pop style of the era - cooing backing vocals, piano triplets, swirling strings and the double-tracked alto sax of arranger-conductor Billy Vaughn, Dot's music director.

Jet Magazine, 1955
Vaughn was working around Cole's limited vocal range and questionable pitch, but he doesn't do her any favors by packing the program with peppy chestnuts like "Sweet Georgia Brown" and "By the Light of the Silvery Moon," which aren't suited to her. She does best with the pensive "So Help Me" and worst with the pop R&B of "(O Baby Mine) I Get So Lonely," a hit for the Four Knights in 1954. She sounds far too ladylike for the latter fare, particularly when set against the kitschy Vaughn arrangement. Cole might have done better with more sensitive backing and better song selection.

Even so, her low-pitched voice is agreeable, and this is a better record than I had recalled. I pulled it out of storage at the request of vocal maven Will Friedwald, who was curious to hear it. Let me finish with a plug for Will's latest book, The Great Jazz and Pop Vocal Albums, which hits the shops November 7. It's sure to be the latest in a long line of erudite and entertaining reads by Will, whose earlier tomes include the astonishingly thorough Biographical Guide to the Great Jazz and Pop Singers, Sinatra! the Song is You, Jazz Singing and many others.

19 October 2017

The 'Original' Slaughter, Plus Related Bonuses

Tamara Geva, George Church
and Ray Bolger in 1936
After I posted a soundtrack making use of themes from Richard Rodgers's "Slaughter on Tenth Avenue," the question came up, what was the original version of this music? We discussed it in the comments section of that post, but I thought I would go over the matter here on the main page, post the original ballet music in its original scoring and add some bonus material from my archives and from generous blog followers.

Richard Rodgers composed "Slaughter on Tenth Avenue" as one of the two ballets incorporated into the 1936 Rodgers-Hart musical, On Your Toes. (The other was "La Princesse Zenobia".) Both were choreographed by George Balanchine. Slaughter takes place in a West Side New York dive, with Ray Bolger and George Church contesting the affections of stripper Tamara Geva, who is eventually killed in a struggle. The ballet echoes the plot of the musical, explained well on the Lorenz Hart website.

Natalia Makarova and Lara Teeter in 1983
In 1983, the legendary George Abbott, who co-wrote the musical and directed the 1936 production, directed a Broadway revival. Abbott was 96 at the time. For the revival, the original orchestrator, 89-year-old Hans Spialek, supervised the use of his original charts, which were heard on the cast album conducted by John Mauceri. For this post, I've transferred that recording of Slaughter, which is in effect the original version.

Those of you who are used to pop versions of Slaughter, or the orchestral arrangement by Spialek's close associate Robert Russell Bennett, will find this approach to be much different. Spialek was arranging for a relatively small pit band. Its pungent sound takes some getting used to, if you are accustomed to lush orchestrations. But it quickly became my favorite version upon its release - and also is much longer than any other recording I know, which I consider to be a good thing. Blog reader Jeff sent along a link to an illuminating New York Times article on Spialek.

Now for a few bonuses.

Cover of 78 set
In conjunction with the last post, reader Kostrow asked me to reupload a post from the early days of this blog, Richard Rodgers conducting selections from Rodgers and Hart shows, circa 1939-40. Originally in an early Columbia 78 album, these were collected into a 10-inch LP, which was the source of my transfer. It's a highly engaging set, with 1930s-style dance band orchestrations, pleasing period vocals by Deane Janis and Lee Sullivan and excellent sound.

Also following the last post, longtime reader RonH was kind enough to contribute a stereo version of the Slaughter on Tenth Avenue soundtrack, which you may find very worthwhile if you like this Herschel Burke Gilbert version of the music.

Links to all items are in the comments to this post.

14 October 2017

Slaughter on Tenth Avenue, the Soundtrack

Back in August, I brought you an Arthur Fiedler LP centered on Richard Rodgers's ballet music, "Slaughter on Tenth Avenue." At that time I noted, "This marks the fifth time I've presented some version of the music on this blog. in the wings is the soundtrack album from the 1957 film Slaughter on Tenth Avenue, in which stolid prosecutor Richard Egan takes on a waterfront mob boss, improbably played by Walter Matthau, to solve a killing on the docks - to the accompaniment of Herschel Burke Gilbert's arrangement of Rodgers's music."

Today is the day when I make good on that promise of said album. In it, Gilbert expands Rodgers's themes out to some 38 minutes or so, and makes them into convincing film noir background music. In doing so, the playful and lyrical aspects of the ballet score are shunted aside, perhaps or necessity, with the result being one dimensional, although enjoyable nonetheless.

Mobster Matthau confronts crusader Egan
Gilbert had begun his career as a Hollywood composer and arranger about 10 years before this assignment. His first soundtrack LP was for The Moon Is Blue, which I have around here somewhere, followed by Gunsmoke, Comanche and then Slaughter. He went on to score hundreds of films and television shows.

Gilbert
IMDb tells us that Henry Mancini assisted with the arranging duties on this film. Joseph Gershenson conducted the Universal-International Orchestra.

Decca's sound was characteristically strident and overbearing, which I have attempted to tame, with good results, I think. This LP did come out in a stereo version, but my copy is mono only, I'm afraid.

The cover may have been one of the first times that two legs were used as a framing device for a cover. The Empire State Building provides a convenient phallic symbol for the imposing male figure, presumably crusading district attorney Richard Egan. It's not clear why a Manhattan DA trying to clean up the NY docks is in Brooklyn (or is it Jersey?), but I guess they couldn't get the right angle on the Empire State from the West Side.

06 October 2017

Lambert's Façade, Sargent's Wand of Youth

Tonight, two versions of Walton's Façade music from Constant Lambert, plus music of Elgar conducted by Sir Malcolm Sargent.

Side one of the LP above contains the two Façade instrumental suites for orchestra, as devised by the composer in 1926 and 1938. (Lambert intermixes the numbers of the two suites.) The second side has the first of two Wand of Youth suites that Elgar devised from his earliest compositions.

Walton by Michael Ayrton
Façade has a complex performance history. Originally devised as a family entertainment by poet Edith Sitwell, her brothers and their friend William Walton, its first public performance came in 1923. The audience saw only a curtain painted with a head. Sitwell and the instrumentalists were backstage, with the poet declaiming her words through a megaphone poking out of the mouth, to the tune of Walton's sophisticated musical parodies. This upper-class leg-pulling created a succès de scandale in certain circles, making enough of a stir that it became a mini-industry in itself, with Sitwell producing additional poems and Walton composing more music. Eventually there were ballet versions as well, and Walton was adding new pieces as late as the 1970s.

Lambert by Christopher Wood
Constant Lambert was closely associated with Façade. He appears to have been the first reciter other than Sitwell herself to present the work, on the occasion of its second performance in 1926. In 1929, he and Sitwell were the speakers in a Decca recording conducted by Walton. I have transferred that version from an LP dub in my collection and added it to the download as a bonus. Lambert was a remarkably facile reciter, who was well matched with Sitwell.

Lambert returned to the recording studios with Façade in 1950, this time as conductor of the  orchestral suites found on the LP above. These give a good impression of Walton's musical achievement, with characteristically fine performances from the vintage Philharmonia.

Sargent by Gerald Festus Kelly
Elgar's Wand of Youth suite could hardly be more different from the Walton-Sitwell "entertainment,"
although it was composed within 15 years of Façade. The Edwardians had a tendency to romanticize youth; several of Elgar's works display this characteristic. (See my post from several years ago discussing The Starlight Express, for an example.) Even so, it would be hard to dispute the charm, warmth and appeal of Elgar's heartfelt music.

Elgar himself conducted both suites for a 1928 recording. I believe the first suite's next appearance on record was in 1949, in a version directed by Eduard van Beinum. The Sargent effort with the Liverpool Philharmonic came only a few months later. Liverpool did not have a top-flight orchestra at the time, but they are in better fettle here than they were a few years earlier in the Horoscope recordings I recently featured.

Edith Sitwell with her brother (Osbert, I believe) in 1922

28 September 2017

Reups: Morton Gould, Simply Heavenly, Sousa

A quick post to let you know about some recent reuploads on the blog, per requests by readers. The links below take you to the original posts. Download links are in the comments sections both there and here.

Morton Gould - Manhattan Moods
From the early days of the blog but refurbished and sounding excellent is this 10-inch LP from blog-favorite Morton Gould. Manhattan Moods is a terrific exercise in the sub-Gershwin genre; the best known example on the record is Alfred Newman's "Street Scene," from 1931. Lou Alter, Matty Malneck and Gould himself also contribute pieces. Excellent sound from 1951.

Simply Heavenly (Original Off-Broadway Cast)
This enjoyable record preserves the original cast performance of Langston Hughes's Simply Heavenly, which appeared off Broadway in 1957. The fine cast is led by Claudia McNeil and Melvin Stewart. Hughes provided his own lyrics; the music is by David Martin. The author adapted the story from his own novels about his character Jesse Semple ("Simple").

Stars and Stripes Forever (Original Soundtrack), Plus Sousa Recordings
The soundtrack of a film biography of march king John Philip Sousa, as produced by 20th Century-Fox in 1952. Fox improbably cast Clifton Webb as the military bandleader, and even more improbably gave the soundtrack to M-G-M records to release. Between the two studios, they managed to capture Alfred Newman's massed brass in subfusc sound. The soundtrack LP does not sound as crisp as the vintage 1920s Sousa recordings I've appended as a bonus.